Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Eruption is a 2024 novel by Michael Crichton and James Patterson, based on an unfinished manuscript by Crichton at the time of his death.It is Crichton's 29th novel, the nineteenth under his own name and the fourth of his novels published posthumously.
Tales of the South Pacific is a Pulitzer Prize-winning collection of sequentially related short stories by James A. Michener about the Pacific campaign in World War II. The stories are based on observations and anecdotes he collected while stationed as a lieutenant commander in the US Navy at the Espiritu Santo Naval Base on the island of Espiritu Santo in the New Hebrides Islands (now known ...
Beenie Man (Island Jamaica) Bernard Szajner; Bill Laswell (Axiom/Island) Bhundu Boys; Black Uhuru; Black Rebel Motorcycle Club; Blancmange; Blessing Annatoria (Island UK) Bob Dylan (Island UK) Bob Marley (Tuff Gong/Island) Bomb the Bass (Quango/Island) Boo-Yaa T.R.I.B.E. (4th & B'way/Island) Boukman Eksperyans (Mango/Island) Boy Kill Boy; Blue ...
Sunday may have seen the premiere of ESPN’s highly anticipated Michael Jordan documentary “Last Dance,” but that wasn’t the day’s only bit of MJ news. A jersey that was worn and signed ...
Crichton's assistant discovered the manuscript on one of Crichton's computers after his death in 2008, along with an unfinished novel, Micro (2011). [1]According to Marla Warren, there is evidence that Crichton had been working on Pirate Latitudes at least since the 1970s; to substantiate her position, she quotes a statement by Patrick McGilligan in the March 1979 issue of American Film that ...
James is a novel by author Percival Everett published by Doubleday in 2024. The novel is a re-imagining of Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain but told from the perspective of Huckleberry's friend on his travels, Jim, who is an escaped slave. The novel won the 2024 Kirkus Prize and the National Book Award for Fiction.
Eaters of the Dead: The Manuscript of Ibn Fadlan Relating His Experiences with the Northmen in AD 922 (later republished as The 13th Warrior to correspond with the film adaptation of the novel) is a 1976 novel by Michael Crichton, the fourth novel under his own name and his 14th overall.
Bruchac is a writer and storyteller who has published more than 120 books. Much of his work explores Abenaki identity and Native storytelling. [3] He began publishing in 1971 and has collaborated on eight books with his son Jim. In 1999, he received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Native Writers' Circle of the Americas. [4]